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Search Result for “Nakhon Ratchasima”

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LIFE

Local wisdom

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 23/12/2018

» Let's have a look at some regional food that is representative of different regions. Nasi dagang is a speciality in the three southernmost provinces of Pattani, Narathiwat and Yala. It consists of rice cooked in coconut milk, with salt, sugar, cumin, fenugreek, ginger and shallots. This type of rice is suitable for fish curry and chicken curry. In the past, it was typically reserved for important occasions, but now it's considered part of the regular cuisine.

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LIFE

Take the road to culinary heaven

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 05/02/2017

» When travelling by road for any distance in Thailand, we naturally want to eat something along the way. You can just stop at a roadside place for a meal when hunger pangs strike, but some people plan everything in advance, choosing specific restaurants and calculating travel times with mealtimes in mind. It can be challenging but is definitely the most fun.

LIFE

Having enough on your plate

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 14/08/2016

» By the term "one-dish meal", most people mean a meal where a single plateful will fill them up. But using satiety as the basis if the definition doesn't really work, because people have different capacities. Some eat very little, while others prefer a big meal. For example, some food shop customers might not feel full after finishing off a plate of pork fried rice and order a plate of kui tiao sen yai raad naa (broad rice noodles with meat in gravy) as a follow up, or start off with pork noodles and then move on to a bowl of yen ta fo. Both examples show that it takes a combination of these dishes to fill up some members of the clientele, and that both cooked-to-order food shops and noodles shops will offer a variety of dishes.

LIFE

The search for the real phat Thai

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 29/11/2015

» Anyone who makes phat Thai for sale and can’t produce a tasty version of the dish probably shouldn’t try to cook anything else, because preparing this favourite properly is no great feat. The ingredients needed to make it are all easy to get hold of: kuay tio sen lek (thin rice noodles), shallots, tofu, peanuts, small dried shrimp, chopped salted Chinese radish, eggs, bean sprouts, kui chaai (garlic chives), vinegar or sour tamarind water, palm sugar, nam plaa, ground dried chillies and fresh vegetables to eat with the noodles — banana flower, spring onion or bai bua boke (leaves of the Asian pennywort plant).

LIFE

Bird is the word

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 08/11/2015

» I probably sound like I’m bragging or exaggerating when I say Thailand is home to the greatest variety of grilled chicken in the world. Be that as it may, there are reasons why chicken cooked this way has been such an important part of Thai cooking and over the centuries spawned countless variants.

LIFE

Fruit in flux in a race to the top

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 10/11/2013

» Anyone who pays attention to the culinary scene here knows that it is constantly in motion. New dishes appear and old favourites recede. Influences from abroad are absorbed, and new approaches are taken to the way ingredients are used as different ones because available or appropriate. Flavours alter, too, in response to shifting preferences. But once a given dish stops changing it means that it has reached an ideal and stable form.

LIFE

Chow down on chanthaburi's famous noodles

B Magazine, Suthon Sukphisit, Published on 05/02/2012

» You don't have to be in Bangkok to enjoy good kui tio _ noodle dishes. There are many local recipes for them in other provinces, each with its own individual character and delicious in its own way. For example, one Thai noodle dish served in Phitsanulok, Sukhothai, Kamphaeng Phet and Tak provinces is made with either ba mee (wheat noodles) or sen lek (fine rice noodles) with orange-tinted boiled pork, minced pork and boiled pork skin with added long beans, dried shrimp, toasted peanuts, dried chillies, and pak chee farang (sawtooth coriander).